Am I being petty or dignified?

Anonymous
Your writing comes across as muddled.
I cannot understand what you are trying to say
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Your writing comes across as muddled.
I cannot understand what you are trying to say


Sorry, English is not my first language. The gist of my question was, how would you behave with someone who slighted you at work? Would you be more formal or same as before?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Your writing comes across as muddled.
I cannot understand what you are trying to say


Sorry, English is not my first language. The gist of my question was, how would you behave with someone who slighted you at work? Would you be more formal or same as before?


You are way overthinking this. Take it down a notch with him and carry on with the rest of your work. I think escalating it to your manager was actually a dramatic response.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Your writing comes across as muddled.
I cannot understand what you are trying to say


Sorry, English is not my first language. The gist of my question was, how would you behave with someone who slighted you at work? Would you be more formal or same as before?


Do whatever it is that makes you feel the most comfortable while you do good work.

You are, indeed, way over thinking this.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Your writing comes across as muddled.
I cannot understand what you are trying to say


Sorry, English is not my first language. The gist of my question was, how would you behave with someone who slighted you at work? Would you be more formal or same as before?


You are way overthinking this. Take it down a notch with him and carry on with the rest of your work. I think escalating it to your manager was actually a dramatic response.


It wasn’t a dramatic response because he was refusing to send me his work to review. I escalated that to my manager and added the him calling me dramatic bit because that’s why he said he won’t send me work.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If multiple sources have confirmed you are not the problem, then you do not have to change your work style. The difficult colleague’s preferences should not be more important than your own freedom to communicate as you wish.

With that said, if there is a simple fix you can do to accommodate this person and it will make life easier for you, go for it. I have some colleagues I am more social with and others I am more direct with, since over time I notice that it gets me better results to harmonize with their work style.


Thanks for your reply! Very helpful. The reason he called me dramatic isn’t because I talk to him too much or whatever. It’s because he wants minimal changes to his work that I review. So I accommodated that because I decided to focus on other teams and projects and don’t want to deal with his issues again.


Wait. That is different than the number of exclamation points and pleasantries. You need to be able to address issues with the work product.


He doesn’t want me to. That’s why he called me dramatic and unilaterally stopped sending me his work. That’s why I leave him alone now and focus on other teams. He has issues with a lot of people so I’m glad I escalated.


He's a team lead. What exactly is your role and are you senior to him or not?
Anonymous
Using a lot of exclamation points is dramatic.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If multiple sources have confirmed you are not the problem, then you do not have to change your work style. The difficult colleague’s preferences should not be more important than your own freedom to communicate as you wish.

With that said, if there is a simple fix you can do to accommodate this person and it will make life easier for you, go for it. I have some colleagues I am more social with and others I am more direct with, since over time I notice that it gets me better results to harmonize with their work style.


Thanks for your reply! Very helpful. The reason he called me dramatic isn’t because I talk to him too much or whatever. It’s because he wants minimal changes to his work that I review. So I accommodated that because I decided to focus on other teams and projects and don’t want to deal with his issues again.


Wait. That is different than the number of exclamation points and pleasantries. You need to be able to address issues with the work product.


He doesn’t want me to. That’s why he called me dramatic and unilaterally stopped sending me his work. That’s why I leave him alone now and focus on other teams. He has issues with a lot of people so I’m glad I escalated.


He's a team lead. What exactly is your role and are you senior to him or not?


Yes, I am senior to him, but that doesn’t mean anything to him. He has said in the past that what his supervisor said re a work topic does not matter to him.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If multiple sources have confirmed you are not the problem, then you do not have to change your work style. The difficult colleague’s preferences should not be more important than your own freedom to communicate as you wish.

With that said, if there is a simple fix you can do to accommodate this person and it will make life easier for you, go for it. I have some colleagues I am more social with and others I am more direct with, since over time I notice that it gets me better results to harmonize with their work style.


Thanks for your reply! Very helpful. The reason he called me dramatic isn’t because I talk to him too much or whatever. It’s because he wants minimal changes to his work that I review. So I accommodated that because I decided to focus on other teams and projects and don’t want to deal with his issues again.


Wait. That is different than the number of exclamation points and pleasantries. You need to be able to address issues with the work product.


He doesn’t want me to. That’s why he called me dramatic and unilaterally stopped sending me his work. That’s why I leave him alone now and focus on other teams. He has issues with a lot of people so I’m glad I escalated.


He's a team lead. What exactly is your role and are you senior to him or not?


Yes, I am senior to him, but that doesn’t mean anything to him. He has said in the past that what his supervisor said re a work topic does not matter to him.


Funny that you could have added much more pertinent detail to your OP but didn't. Do you have a lack of confidence?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If multiple sources have confirmed you are not the problem, then you do not have to change your work style. The difficult colleague’s preferences should not be more important than your own freedom to communicate as you wish.

With that said, if there is a simple fix you can do to accommodate this person and it will make life easier for you, go for it. I have some colleagues I am more social with and others I am more direct with, since over time I notice that it gets me better results to harmonize with their work style.


Thanks for your reply! Very helpful. The reason he called me dramatic isn’t because I talk to him too much or whatever. It’s because he wants minimal changes to his work that I review. So I accommodated that because I decided to focus on other teams and projects and don’t want to deal with his issues again.


Wait. That is different than the number of exclamation points and pleasantries. You need to be able to address issues with the work product.


He doesn’t want me to. That’s why he called me dramatic and unilaterally stopped sending me his work. That’s why I leave him alone now and focus on other teams. He has issues with a lot of people so I’m glad I escalated.


He's a team lead. What exactly is your role and are you senior to him or not?


Yes, I am senior to him, but that doesn’t mean anything to him. He has said in the past that what his supervisor said re a work topic does not matter to him.


Funny that you could have added much more pertinent detail to your OP but didn't. Do you have a lack of confidence?


Yes, and I’m working with a therapist. Obviously only someone lacking confidence would wonder about whether being formal with a rude and weird colleague is “petty.”
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Your writing comes across as muddled.
I cannot understand what you are trying to say


Sorry, English is not my first language. The gist of my question was, how would you behave with someone who slighted you at work? Would you be more formal or same as before?


You are way overthinking this. Take it down a notch with him and carry on with the rest of your work. I think escalating it to your manager was actually a dramatic response.


+1
I don't know where you hail from, OP, but in America people are (generally) allowed to not want to work with someone and even say it. Is it good for your working rep? No. As we see, this guy has a reputation. But who really cares that he said that or thinks that. You can't run to your manager that people say this unless it's keeping you from doing your work. That's going to give you the difficult reputation.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Your writing comes across as muddled.
I cannot understand what you are trying to say


Sorry, English is not my first language. The gist of my question was, how would you behave with someone who slighted you at work? Would you be more formal or same as before?


You are way overthinking this. Take it down a notch with him and carry on with the rest of your work. I think escalating it to your manager was actually a dramatic response.


It wasn’t a dramatic response because he was refusing to send me his work to review. I escalated that to my manager and added the him calling me dramatic bit because that’s why he said he won’t send me work.


If he is supposed to send you his work to review and unilaterally decided not to, that is the problem. What he thinks of you is irrelevant - he needs to follow protocol, right? If he isn’t happy with procedures, he should leave.

It sounds like he is very annoying but you should not care whether he calls you dramatic or something else. He is the one not fulfilling his duties
Anonymous
I mean, he said you were dramatic and you immediately told on him and demanded to be allowed to work with him. You proved his point. Tons of exclamation points are immature.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I mean, he said you were dramatic and you immediately told on him and demanded to be allowed to work with him. You proved his point. Tons of exclamation points are immature.



He’s supposed to send me his work. Not sending it to me disrupts the workflow (quote from his supervisor).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Your writing comes across as muddled.
I cannot understand what you are trying to say


Sorry, English is not my first language. The gist of my question was, how would you behave with someone who slighted you at work? Would you be more formal or same as before?


You are way overthinking this. Take it down a notch with him and carry on with the rest of your work. I think escalating it to your manager was actually a dramatic response.


It wasn’t a dramatic response because he was refusing to send me his work to review. I escalated that to my manager and added the him calling me dramatic bit because that’s why he said he won’t send me work.


If he is supposed to send you his work to review and unilaterally decided not to, that is the problem. What he thinks of you is irrelevant - he needs to follow protocol, right? If he isn’t happy with procedures, he should leave.

It sounds like he is very annoying but you should not care whether he calls you dramatic or something else. He is the one not fulfilling his duties


Thank you! Def should do more “not caring.”
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